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š The best (and worst) Prem managers
Plus: Sir Jim Ratcliffe buys 25% stake in Manchester United
GM football fans. Route One here, the only football newsletter that delivers more than Santa at Christmas.
šØ FPL Gameweek 19 deadline is 11:00 am GMT today so get your transfers locked in ASAP.
We will resume our normal schedule on Wednesday 3rd January.
In the meantime, today is different to usual. To help you get through the awkward silences with the in-laws during the holidays, weāve got a long read for you to tuck in to.
Todayās briefing is a ~4 min read:
The best (and worst) Premier League managers in history š¤
Extra time: Sir Jim Ratcliffe agrees 25% stake in Man United š°
A message from the R1 teamā¦
Hey, Router, we wanted to let you know that we will resume our normal schedule on Wednesday 3rd January.
We knowā¦ we know. Weāll miss you too.
How are you going to possibly start your day without R1 each morning? Weāre not quite sure either.
But we promise to be back with a bang in the New Year. For the FPL-obsessed readers, weāll be sharing some exciting updates, including:
An FPL āinsider tradingā bot that reveals real players transfers each gameweek.
An AI-optimised team that weāll share just in time for your transfers.
Stay tuned for exclusive access to both Lastly, we donāt like to be soppyā¦ itās not our style.
But we want to say a huge thank you to our readers for waking up and choosing R1 to start your dayā¦ especially those who send compliments.
We like thoseā¦
Our growth has been immense and itās been largely because of your word-of-mouth. So, again, THANK YOU!
Speak soon and see you on the flip side, Router. āļø
The Premier League managers who are the best (and worst) at their job š¤
At work, our performance is analysed, judged, and quantified.
But thereās no other job in England that suffers from the level of scrutiny that a Premier League manager does.
Premier League managers must appease everyone from players and fans to pundits and owners. In most cases, the higher the % of wins that a manager achieves and the greater their goal difference (as a proxy for their teamās style of play), the less scrutiny they endure.
We wanted to see who were the best (and worst) Premier League managers in history.
Hereās what we found.
Win %
Win percentage is the best way to determine a managerās success.
The only managers that have been analysed here are those with more than 50 Premier League matches in charge.
It should be acknowledged that win percentage, like any metric, isnāt a perfect proxy for measuring a managerās ability. Sometimes, good managers are at worse clubs.
But looking at a managerās entire Premier League career still provides some insight into their ability to impact the teams they are in charge of.
Across all managers in the Premier League with 50+ games, the average win percentage is 35%. But as you can see below, many managers are far from average - in both directions.
Looking solely at win percentage, Pep Guardiola is the clear front-runner. This isnāt surprising. After all, the Spaniard has led Manchester City to a Treble, as well as a Centurianās winning season.
Another high ranker here is Sir Alex Ferguson, whoās the only other manager on the list to win a treble, with Manchester United in 1999.
Another trend is that the top six managers have all won the Premier League league title.
Interestingly, managers who have won the Champions League arenāt necessarily those with the highest win rate in the Premier League. In the table, the managers that have won the Champions League are spread from poll position to the very bottom - Pep Guardiola and Rafa Benitez, respectfully.
The other managers who have had European glory are Sir Alex Ferguson, Jurgen Klopp, and Thomas Tuchel.
In general, managers who have managed wealthier teams have achieved a better win rate. Subjectively speaking, Sean Dyche is a well-respected manager who fails to make it into the top 20 based on win %, but thereās a strong case that he would make many peopleās top 20 manager list.
Thatās why itās important to look at other measurements of a managerās skills.
Points per match
Next, we turn our attention to points per match to see which managers secure the most points on average.
Again, weāre just looking at Premier League managers with 50+ games in charge.
Managers in our dataset averaged around 1.32 points per match. As the maximum number of points per match is three, a difference of one or two points per match is dramatic.
While Pep Guardiola leads the table again, itās worth noting that Sir Alex Ferguson was manager of Manchester United for 810 games. Pep has managed Manchester City for a fraction of that - 283 games.
So, Fergusonās points per minute (2.16) is a better reflection of his ability due to the larger sample size. This isnāt to say that managers with fewer games - like Jurgen Klopp, Roberto Mancini and Pep - are lesser managers, but itās to recognise the incredible feat of the Scot's reign at United.
His high points per game were more consistent over a much longer period, where his team were subject to varying opposition, rule changes, and everything else that makes football so random.
The managers at the other end of the table often donāt stay in charge of Premier League clubs for too long.
Only two managers in the bottom 20 - Paul Lambert (154) and Chris Hughton (174) - have been in charge for longer than 140 Premier League games.
But points per game arenāt the only indicator of a managerās dominance. We can look at the Premier League managerās goal difference per game which shows us just how strong each manager made their team during their time in charge.
The goal difference matrix
In the chart below, each dot represents one manager, ranked both by goal difference per game (y-axis) and total games in charge (x-axis).
Each quadrant tells a different story:
Top right: managers like Arsene Wenger and Sir Alex Ferguson tell a story of consistency: They both had over 800 games in charge but still drastically outperformed the average goal difference per game.
Bottom right: The veterans of the Premier League - Roy Hodgson, Harry Redknapp, Sam Allardyce. While all - but David Moyes - sit in the negative for goal difference per game, this doesnāt account for the teams that theyāve managed. Theyāre often bought in to manage teams at the bottom half of the table which rightfully prioritise security over dominant offensive performances.
Top left: This is where the new generation of high-flyers lie - managers with exceptionally high goal difference per game, but just over a slightly shorter period. Theyāve managed the top teams and have prioritised offensive styles of play.
But we wanted to put this into context, to show that some managers have achieved a lot with far fewer resources.
So, we looked at each managerās points compared to their overall expenditure. For example:
Sam Allardyce doesnāt make it into the top 20 highest points per match, but when we adjusted the data to look at how much each manager spent, he is second.
The transfer expenditure data was taken from Transfer Markt. The data is not adjusted for inflation, which skews it in favour of managers who were in charge earlier than after.
Given the huge increase in transfer prices over the last few years, this means that modern managers will look like theyāve spent more - which is sometimes true and sometimes not.
This category is dominated by veteran managers. Again, this may be a result of their transfer costs not being as high, but it also gives a better indication of a managerās skill despite their financial backing.
Interestingly, all the high flyers rank less on this metric than the others. Pep Guardiola, the front-runner, ranks 36th, Mourinho ranks 28th and Jurgen Klopp ranks 23rd.
Kloppās ranking here is perhaps the most impressive. With Liverpoolās savvy, yet effective, spending over the past decade, theyāve managed to achieve a lot with less money spent.
Erik ten Hag (Manchester United) and Thomas Tuhcel (Chelsea) are perhaps the most questionable. Both managers have been part of teams that have spent unwisely and have subsequently underperformed in the Premier League. Itās no surprise that they slot far lower in the ranking.
The final whistle
There are so many factors at play when looking at whoās the best and worst manager.
But, across the board, two categories of managers stand out in the Premier League:
The high flyers: the managers that spend a lot of money but also yield very good results for their fans.
Pep Guardiola
Sir Alex Ferguson
Jurgen Klopp
Arsene Wenger
Roberto Mancini
Jose Mourinho
The Premier League veterans: the managers who make the best out of a difficult situation, cementing themselves as reliable leaders who can compete and survive.
Sam Allardyce
Harry Redknapp
David Moyes
Martin OāNeill
Gerard Houllier
Sean Dyche
Of course, at the end of the day, this is all subjective. And no one competes with Pat Ricesā 100% managerial record with Arsenal (small print: in three games), right?
Right?
EXTRA-TIME ā±ļø
Sir Jim Ratcliffe has agreed a deal to buy 25% stake of Manchester United for about $1.3bn (Ā£1.03bn). Ratcliffeās Ineos Group will take control of football operations and have agreed to Ā£236m in future investment into Old Trafford stadium.
Itās Christmas time and Kevin De Bruyne is embracing every minute of it. The Man City midfielder recreates scenes from Home Aloneā¦ but weāre not betting on a future acting career. Sorry KDB.
Itās never great to be friend-zonedā¦ especially when itās in front of the nation and your team is losing at halftime.
Sergio Ramos was known for his hard-hitting style of play. But now heās making hitsā¦ and weāre talking song hits with his Spanish track titled NO ME CONTRADIGAS which translates to ādonāt contradict meā. Thatās all we knowā¦
Michail Antonio doesnāt let Callum Wilson get away with this one. On their podcast āThe Players Channelā, Antonio clowns Wilson for complaining about Vicarioās face-pulling in the post-match interview.